The discovery of exceptionally well-preserved plant macroremains in an early Iron Age (11th century BCE) compound in Tell Abu al- Kharaz, Jordan Valley, sheds light on agricultural and storage practices in the Southern Levant. The samples, which primarily were intended to serve as dating material, were collected in four different basement rooms of the compound. The analysed samples consisted of edible plants such as wheat, barley, chickpea, grass pea, flax, lentil, olive, pomegranate and common grape. In contrast to other Levantine sites, where free-threshing wheat dominates in the Iron Age, the dominant cereal crop at Tell Abu al-Kharaz was emmer wheat, which is more tolerant to drought and poor soils and less susceptible to diseases. It i...
Among archaeological micro-remains, starches can be used as a tool for reconstructing past environme...
The present study investigates the occurrence of wild grasses at Epipalaeolithic and aceramic Neolit...
There have been only a few archaeobotanical investigations of early medieval sites in Switzerland (5...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityThe Pre-Pottery Neolithic period (ca. 11,700-8250 cal. B.P.) marks ...
This archaeobotanical analysis was carried out as part of the Khirbet Faris project: a multi- discip...
Tell Bouqras is a Neolithic site (conventional radiocarbon years : 8350-7850 BP) in eastern Syria, o...
International audienceOasian agrobiodiversity in Northwestern Arabia has a long and deep history whi...
Much concerning food production and consumption is known from historical sources. But research on th...
International audienceDharih is a rural site located in the Jordanian higlands and occupied mainly f...
We present detailed accounts of the archaeobotanical remains recovered from the excavations of the s...
This thesis examines macrobotanical remains recovered from Early Bronze Age and Iron Age (approximat...
The origins of bread have long been associated with the emergence of agriculture and cereal domestic...
In this paper we present the analysis of archaeobotanical material retrieved by means of flotation f...
Among the carbonized seeds and fruits recovered from Late Bronze Age and Iron Age layers of Deir 'Al...
The origin of cereal domestication is a key current issue of archaeological research in the Fertile ...
Among archaeological micro-remains, starches can be used as a tool for reconstructing past environme...
The present study investigates the occurrence of wild grasses at Epipalaeolithic and aceramic Neolit...
There have been only a few archaeobotanical investigations of early medieval sites in Switzerland (5...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityThe Pre-Pottery Neolithic period (ca. 11,700-8250 cal. B.P.) marks ...
This archaeobotanical analysis was carried out as part of the Khirbet Faris project: a multi- discip...
Tell Bouqras is a Neolithic site (conventional radiocarbon years : 8350-7850 BP) in eastern Syria, o...
International audienceOasian agrobiodiversity in Northwestern Arabia has a long and deep history whi...
Much concerning food production and consumption is known from historical sources. But research on th...
International audienceDharih is a rural site located in the Jordanian higlands and occupied mainly f...
We present detailed accounts of the archaeobotanical remains recovered from the excavations of the s...
This thesis examines macrobotanical remains recovered from Early Bronze Age and Iron Age (approximat...
The origins of bread have long been associated with the emergence of agriculture and cereal domestic...
In this paper we present the analysis of archaeobotanical material retrieved by means of flotation f...
Among the carbonized seeds and fruits recovered from Late Bronze Age and Iron Age layers of Deir 'Al...
The origin of cereal domestication is a key current issue of archaeological research in the Fertile ...
Among archaeological micro-remains, starches can be used as a tool for reconstructing past environme...
The present study investigates the occurrence of wild grasses at Epipalaeolithic and aceramic Neolit...
There have been only a few archaeobotanical investigations of early medieval sites in Switzerland (5...